
			README for ivtools 1.2


This directory contains a release of ivtools 1.2.7.  You should read
the rest of this file for information on what ivtools is and the
INSTALL file for instructions on how to build it.

The overall copyright and permission notice for ivtools can be found
in the COPYRIGHT file in this directory.  It is similar to the X11
copyright, otherwise known as non-copylefted freeware.  

* What is ivtools?:

Online documentation (including an FAQ) is available for ivtools at:

	http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/doc/

ivtools is a layered collection of application frameworks for building
custom drawing editors and spatial data servers.  It incorporates a
backward compatible copy of the original InterViews and Unidraw class
libraries and sample programs (from 3.2a.tar.Z), augmented with new
class libraries and sample programs for a wide variety of generic
spatial data applications.

ivtools comprises four sets of interrelated capabilities useful to
application programmers.  The first set is the libraries and example
programs borrowed whole from InterViews 3.1.  The second set is for
reusing and extending the light-weight glyph objects of InterViews 3.1
which embody a lot of the capability of TeX.  The third set reuses and
extends the Unidraw library (Unidraw is a major portion of the overall
InterViews 3.1 release that provides an application framework for
custom drawing editors).  The fourth set adds a command interpreter
and server mechanism to ivtools, and demonstrates these capabilities
with text, glyph, and graphic front-ends.  To get more of an overview
of these layers you can read:

    http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/ivtools-layers.html.

These are the libraries and example programs borrowed straight from
InterViews 3.1:

	IV		library of InterView 3.1, InterViews 2.6, Dispatch,
			OS, and TIFF objects
	dclock		digital clock with fading digits
	iclass		C++ class browser
	idemo		glyph demo 

These are the libraries and example programs that make up the glyph
part of ivtools (programs in the glyphs directory):

	IVGlyph		library of Glyph derived classes

	bdvtable        bounded-value editing 
	formdemo	value-editing 
	gclock		glyph-based clock
	meter           sliding meter
	radiogroup      radio-buttons
	scrollable	2d scrollable glyph
	scrollfield	2d scrollable field-editor
	strchooser	string chooser 
	timestamp	editable time glyph

Plus a generally useful text display and editing program:

	ivtext     emacs-like text editor 

Also all the glyph example programs from InterViews 3.1 have been
added in an examples3.1 directory under the glyphs directory.

These are the libraries and example programs that make up the Unidraw
part of ivtools:

	Unidraw		copy of Unidraw library from InterViews 3.1
	UniIdraw        librarification of 3.1 idraw 
	OverlayUnidraw  extended Unidraw/idraw framework
	TopoFace	spatial network library (nodes, edges, faces)
	GraphUnidraw    graph browser/editor library
	FrameUnidraw    multi-frame display mechanism

	idraw		idraw built on UniIdraw library
	drawtool        extended version of idraw built on OverlayUnidraw
	graphdraw       graph browser/editor integrated with drawtool
	flipbook        flipbook multi-frame editor based on drawtool

These are the libraries that make up the command interpreter part of
ivtools:

	ComUtil		command interpreter utility functions
	Attribute	attribute property list mechanism
	AttrGlyph	glyphs for Attribute library
	ComTerp		command interpreter objects
	ComGlyph	glyphs for ComTerp library	
	ComUnidraw      drawing editor with command interpreter
	DrawServ        drawing server framework with support
			for graphs and frames.

	comtest		test program
	comterp 	sample command interpreter 
	glyphterp	command interpreter user interface
	comdraw		drawtool with command interpreter
	drawserv        comdraw with both graphs and frames.

Note: GraphUnidraw/graphdraw and FrameUnidraw/flipbook have been
rearranged within the ivtools source tree to take advantage of the
ComUnidraw framework layer, so they really could be listed in both of
the previous sections.

There is also a Time library with Date and Time classes borrowed from
the NIH's class library, and an example program, ivxt, that shows how
an Xt widget can be wrapped around an InterViews application.
Finally, there is a collection of utilities (utils) and shell scripts
(scripts) that augment the drawing editors of ivtools with minor
capabilities.  See the relevant directories and files for further
information.
	
A series of makefile targets support the checkin of sources to
cvs/rcs, and their subsequent update and modification.  This requires
a copy of cvs available from the Free Software Foundation and
ivmkcm-0.7.2 available through http://www.ivtools.org/ivmkcm/

* More ivtools details

ivtools is known to build with many versions of gcc (up to gcc-4.3)
and on a variety of Unix'es: SunOS 4.1 (MIT's X11R5), Solaris 2.6
(X11R6), Irix 5.2 (SGI's X11R5), Linux 1.2 (Slackware 3.0, XFree86
3.1), Linux 2.* (RedHat 4.0 thru 7.0, Debian 2.* and 3.*), NetBSD,
FreeBSD, and Darwin (Mac OS X).  There are contributed configs that
are out of date for HPUX and Dec Alpha (though the HPUX contrib might
almost have it right). It has been built on Windows NT 4.0 using
Cygwin from Cygnus Solutions (see README.cygwin).  You can find links
to available binaries on the ivtools web page (http://www.ivtools.org)
and ivtools download page
(http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/download.html)

If you have a question about this software, desire to add code, found
a bug, want to request a feature, or wonder how to get further
assistance, please send e-mail to the general purpose ivtools mailing
list, ivtools-user@lists.sourceforge.net.  To subcribe to the mailing
list, visit
http://lists.sourceforge.net/mailman/listinfo/ivtools-user.  Other
ivtools related mailing lists can be found at:

	http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/mailinglists.html

Read about finding and generating all this from inline documentation
below.  A copy of the ivtools html documentation will be available for
download as well:

	http://downloads.sourceforge.net/ivtools/ivtools-doc-1.2.tgz

A SourceForge project page for ivtools can be found at:

	http://sourceforge.net/project/ivtools

Read about other vector graphic free software at:

	http://sourceforge.net/foundry/vectorgraphics

* Finding and Generating Inline Documentation

Extensive documentation is embedded within the ivtools source tree,
including most all of the documentation originally available for
InterViews 3.1 and Unidraw.  You can find all of it pre-extracted
here:

        http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/doc/

Here is a list of documentation:

	- README/man pages for executable programs

	Within most directories that contain an executable program
	(a main.c) you'll find a README that explains something
	about the program, how to use it, what it does, what
	arguments it takes.  In the case of the drawing editors
	and command interpreters this README has been further
	processed into a man page, which can be found in its
	uninstalled state in the src/man/man1 directory or wherever 
	you elect to install them.

	- HTML class documentation

	Many of the C++ class libraries of ivtools are documented 
	using comments in the header files (the .h files) that can
	be extracted using PERCEPS, a Perl documentation generator for
	C++ (http://starship.python.net/crew/tbryan/PERCEPS/).

	See src/html/README for instructions on auto-generating these
	web pages yourself, or see the result on-line at:

		http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/doc/classes/

	- InterViews 3.1 and Unidraw man pages

	All the original man pages from InterViews 3.1 and Unidraw have
	been preserved, and can be found in src/man/man3, or where ever
	you elect to install them.  They also can be browsed online at:

		http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/doc/man3.1/

	- InterViews 3.1 reference manual 

	The original reference manual for InterViews 3.1 can be found in
	PostScript form at src/man/refman3.1/refman.PS.  It is also
	found in page-indexable online form at:

		http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/doc/refman3.1/


* Building on top of ivtools

Copied from the ivtools FAQ: 

	http://www.ivtools.org/ivtools/faq.html#standalonedevel

Q: How do I set up a stand-alone program or source tree on top of ivtools
for development purposes?

A: If you are writing a stand-alone program that will exist in a
single directory, simply copy an appropriate Imakefile and main.c from
a InterViews or ivtools example program directory, modify accordingly,
then use "ivmkmf -a" to generate the Makefile. Make sure you are using
a fresh ivmkmf that corresponds to your installation of ivtools. An
example of this is the comtop sample program, a stand-alone program
separate from ivtools that builds on top of the comterp command
interpreter mechanism.  

** comtop.tgz is now part of the ivtools distribution **

If you are setting up an entire source tree with both class libraries
and executable programs, you will want to get started by replicating
an equivalent source tree (i.e. vhclmaps) and change or rename all
directories or files as appropriate. 

** read more on vhclmaps at http://www.ivtools.org/vhclmaps/ **


* Acknowledgements:

Roster of ivtools programmers:

	Scott Johnston
	Jorge Gautier
	Brian Hogencamp
	Rick Kissh
	Eric Kahler

InterViews 3.1 programmers that we know of:

	Mark Linton
	John Vlissides
	Paul Calder
	John Interrante
	Scott Stanton
	Steven Tang

ivtools can be built to leverage a variety of separate third-party
libraries:

	* clippoly from Klamer Schutte for polygon intersection
	(licensed under the LGPL)

	* ACE from Doug Schmidt for middleware networking frameworks
	(licensed similar to X Windows)

	* IUE (the Image Understanding Environment) from Amerinex
	(half public-domain, half licensed similar to X Windows)

ivtools detects and uses at runtime a variety of third-party executables:

	* qhull from the University of Minnesota Geometry Center

	* pstoedit from Wolfgang Glunz

	* ghostscript from L. Peter Deutsch and Aladdin Systems

	* djpeg from the JPEG group

	* giftopnm from Jef Poskanzer's pbmplus toolkit
	(a copy of anytopnm from the same toolkit is incorporated into
	the scripts directory)

OverlayUnidraw incorporates Version 3.1 of a "C++ Vector and Matrix
Algebra routnes" (algebra3.h) from Jean-Francois Doue.
	
HPUX (HP-800) config contributed by Neal Becker.  ALPHA config
contributed by Bruno Delfosse at Thomson CSF.  A lot of feedback on
Solaris 2.6 building from M. Rasit Eskicioglu at the University of
Alberta. NetBSD port and other assistance from Todd Gruhn.

Cygwin development environment for Windows NT from RedHat (Cygnus Solutions).

Patches to iv-3.2a incorporated from the PDP++ distribution from
Carnegie Mellon University Department of Psychiatry, Randall
C. O'Reilly, et. al.

Patches for Debian 2.0 packaging incorporated from Guenter Geiger.
This work included the conversion of drawtool, flipbook, and graphdraw
README's to man page format.

Patch for iv-3.1 shift key handling from Doug Scott, the author of
MiXViews.

Certain InterViews libraries (Dispatch, IV, IV-2_6, IV-X11,
InterViews, OS, TIFF, Unidraw) and example programs (iclass, idemo,
idraw) are copied from the InterViews 3.1 sources.  Here is the
aggregrate copyright notice for that software package:

/*
 * Copyright (c) 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991 Stanford University
 * Copyright (c) 1991 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
 * 
 * Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and 
 * its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided
 * that (i) the above copyright notices and this permission notice appear in
 * all copies of the software and related documentation, and (ii) the names of
 * Stanford and Silicon Graphics may not be used in any advertising or
 * publicity relating to the software without the specific, prior written
 * permission of Stanford and Silicon Graphics.
 * 
 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS-IS" AND WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, 
 * EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR OTHERWISE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY 
 * WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  
 * 
 * IN NO EVENT SHALL STANFORD OR SILICON GRAPHICS BE LIABLE FOR
 * ANY SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND,
 * OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS,
 * WHETHER OR NOT ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF DAMAGE, AND ON ANY THEORY OF 
 * LIABILITY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE 
 * OF THIS SOFTWARE.
 */

The building of Unidraw with gcc-2.5.* (and subsequent versions)
was enabled by a patch from Adam Zell.

The TIFF library was written by Sam Leffler and published with this
copyright and permission notice:

/*
 * Copyright (c) 1991, 1992 Sam Leffler
 * Copyright (c) 1991, 1992 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
 *
 * Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and 
 * its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided
 * that (i) the above copyright notices and this permission notice appear in
 * all copies of the software and related documentation, and (ii) the names of
 * Sam Leffler and Silicon Graphics may not be used in any advertising or
 * publicity relating to the software without the specific, prior written
 * permission of Sam Leffler and Silicon Graphics.
 * 
 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS-IS" AND WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, 
 * EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR OTHERWISE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY 
 * WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  
 * 
 * IN NO EVENT SHALL SAM LEFFLER OR SILICON GRAPHICS BE LIABLE FOR
 * ANY SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND,
 * OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS,
 * WHETHER OR NOT ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF DAMAGE, AND ON ANY THEORY OF 
 * LIABILITY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE 
 * OF THIS SOFTWARE.
 */

The strchooser example and StrChooser class were contributed by David
B. Hollenbeck, as well as the glyph-based Motif-look pull-down menus
of OverlayUnidraw.  Here is his copyright notice:

/*
 * Copyright (c) 1993 David B. Hollenbeck
 *
 * Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and 
 * its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided
 * that (i) the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
 * all copies of the software and related documentation, and (ii) the name of
 * David B. Hollenbeck may not be used in any advertising or
 * publicity relating to the software without the specific, prior written
 * permission of David B. Hollenbeck.
 * 
 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS-IS" AND WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, 
 * EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR OTHERWISE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY 
 * WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  
 *
 * IN NO EVENT SHALL DAVID B. HOLLENBECK BE LIABLE FOR
 * ANY SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND,
 * OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS,
 * WHETHER OR NOT ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF DAMAGE, AND ON ANY THEORY OF 
 * LIABILITY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE 
 * OF THIS SOFTWARE.
 */

The scrollable example is based on code from Chen Wang

The text-editor example program is by Jan Andersson of Torpa Konsult
AB.  Here is that copyright notice:

//
// Simple Text Editor
//
//
// Copyright (C) 1993 Ellemtel Telecommunication Systems Labratories
//
// Permission is granted to any individual or institution to use, copy,
// modify, and distribute this software, provided that this complete
// copyright and permission notice is maintained, intact, in all copies
// and supporting documentation.
//
// Ellemtel Telecommunication Systems Labratories make no representation
// of the suitability of this software for any purpose. It is provided
// "as is" without any expressed or implied warranty.
//
// Jan Andersson, Torpa Konsult AB
// janne at torpa.se - 1993-08-29

The Date and Time classes in the Time library are borrowed from the
NIHCL class library, written by K. E. Gorlen, Computer Sciences
Laboratory, DCRT, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892,
and published with this notice:

     THIS SOFTWARE FITS THE DESCRIPTION IN THE U.S. COPYRIGHT ACT OF A
     "UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT WORK".  IT WAS WRITTEN AS A PART OF THE
     AUTHOR'S OFFICIAL DUTIES AS A GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEE.  THIS MEANS IT
     CANNOT BE COPYRIGHTED.  THIS SOFTWARE IS FREELY AVAILABLE TO THE
     PUBLIC FOR USE WITHOUT A COPYRIGHT NOTICE, AND THERE ARE NO
     RESTRICTIONS ON ITS USE, NOW OR SUBSEQUENTLY.

The graylevel raster and painting mechanisms of OverlayUnidraw were
originated by Richard B. Kissh under contract to Vectaport Inc, as
well as the shared memory rasters and asychronous incremental download
of rasters.

The ComUtil library was originally developed at Triple Vision
Inc. under NSF Grant ISI-8521259 (authors/contributors: Robert
C. Fitch, Richard A. Fundakowski, Robert K. Graber, Scott
E. Johnston).

The ivdl URL downloading utility was developed by Eric F. Kahler under
contract to Vectaport Inc.

Keung Chi Ng of IET Inc. has provided a good deal of feedback on
ivtools over the years, and has assisted in demonstrating the
viability of the application frameworks by developing a variety of
vertical applications on top of OverlayUnidraw, FrameUnidraw, and
GraphUnidraw.

The balance of ivtools has been developed by Vectaport Inc. (P.O. Box
7141, Redwood City, CA 94063), with additional support from IET Inc.
(P.O.  Box 112450, Campbell, CA 95011) in the form of ARPA
subcontracts (DACA76-93-C-0025 and DACA76-97-C-0005), as well as
directly employing Scott Johnston from April 1999 thru August 2000 and
giving him the freedom to evolve ivtools and related open-source
frameworks as part of his job. There was also support from Applied
Sciences Inc, San Francisco, CA, in the form of a subcontract for a
Phase II SBIR from NASA Ames.
